I am completely through with all the books currently available from Susan Wittig Albert, Diane Mott Davidson, Joanne Fluke, and Sarah Graves, I am looking for some recommendations for similar series that are worth reading.

The Gaslight Mysteries (Sarah Brandt/Frank Malloy) by Victoria Thompson are historical mysteries set in NYC at the turn of the last century. They are a little different than the books you mentioned but I highly recommend them. Good stuff!

You might enjoy the Cooking Class Mystery series by Miranda Bliss. The books include:

Cooking Up Murder

Annie and Eve are life-long best friends who have absolutely nothing in common-except a lack of skill in the kitchen. So when they sign up for a cooking class at the local gourmet shop, they figure the only things at risk are a few innocent fruits and vegetables. But on the first night, Annie and Eve see their fellow student Beyla arguing with a man-a man who later turns up dead in the parking lot. Now the friends feel bound to uncover whatever secrets she's hiding, before someone else's goose-perhaps one of their own-gets cooked.

Murder On the Menu
Dead Men Don't Get the Munchies
Dying for Dinner
Murder Has a Sweet Tooth

Or... The Flower Shop Mysteries by Kate Collins:

Mum's the Word

Abby Knight is the proud owner of her hometown flower shop, but a new low-cost competitor is killing her profits-and a black SUV just rammed her vintage Corvette in a hit-and-run. She's determined to track down the driver, but when the trail turns deadly, the next flower arrangement might be for her own funeral.

Slay It With Flowers
Dearly Depotted
Snipped in the Bud
Acts of Violets
Rose From the Dead
Shoots To Kill
Evil in Carnations

I would suggest reading both series in the sequence written as the characters, and their relationships, develop as the books move along. (I've listed them in the order written.)

Have you tried Diane Mott Davidson's books? She is a Caterer in the Colorado area, and Ive enjoyed a couple of her books as well.

Have you seen this site?

~~~ If you're looking for your next Cozy (or Not So Cozy) Mystery, here's a site that will definitely help you... It provides alphabetical & chronological lists of authors, books, holiday mysteries, and more!

The Flower Shop Mysteries are pretty good. Also try the Scrumble River Mysteries by Denise Swanson and I highly recommend Donna Andrews' Meg Langslow series - she's a blacksmith and unlike Stephanie Plum, her romance eventually leads to marriage. She's very funny.

I read Jerrilyn Farmer's Maddie Bean mysteries set in Southern Ca, she's a caterer, and they were good, but she hasn't released anything lately.

One more option are the Crimes of Fashion mysteries by Ellen Byerrum. The heroine is smart, funny a newspaper reporter on the fashion beat who wants badly to be a regular news reporter. Byerrum is herself a PI in Virginia and the books are set mostly in the DC area.

I really like the Maddie Springer High Heels series by Gemma Halliday. There are only five books in this series. I guess this is a smart idea. This way the reader doesn't get bored. Halliday is taking one of the characters and spinning off a new series.

I third the Robin Paige mysteries by Susan Wittig Albert and her husband Bill Albert. On the same author, Susan Wittig Albert has another good series called "The Cottage Tales of Beatrix Potter". They sound like they are for children, but they aren't. This series is a tie-in from one of the Robin Paige books.

The Aunt Dimity Series by Nancy Atherton

Death on Demand Series by Carolyn Hart

There is a new China Bayles mystery coming from Susan Wittig Albert in April 2010 called "Holly Blues"

One of my favorite recent cozy series is by Camille Minichino. They are called the Periodic Table Mysteries. Now, before you say, yuck science, which is what I did when I first heard of them, hear me out. The first book is The Hydrogen Murder. In it, Dr. Gloria Lamerino returns to her hometown in Massachusetts from a self-imposed decades long exile to California, where she worked as a physicist. Now retired, she is trying to settle back into life in the East, but is bothered by memories of her long-dead boyfriend and her vindictive mother. When a local physicist is found murdered, Gloria is brought in by the police as a scientific expert to explain some technical details to the police. Very good books.

Minichino also writes a series featuring a woman who creates miniatures, dollhouses and the like. This series is written under the name Margaret Grace. Oddly enough, even though I love miniatures and have built a dollhouse myself, and I hate science, I like the Minichino books and don't care as much for the Grace books.